Newspapers / InterCom (Durham, N.C.) / March 1, 1968, edition 1 / Page 7
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6ukc untucRsity mcdicM ccntcR MYSTERV PHOTO CONTEST DEANS-HOUR SCHEDULE % 1 Behold this month's mystery photo in all its glory, be the first to guess what it is, and Medical Photo graphy will do an excellent job enlarging your favorite black and white photograph (we sure hope to have a winner this time.'). All employees, faculty, staff, and students are eligible, and winners will be announced in the following issue. Send your entries to Public Relations, Box 3354, Hospital. And tune in next month- for the solution. Good Luck! Our mystery photo photographer pulled a sneaky one for our first one last, month. The photo really did look like a hole in the ice or chipped plaster, but it wasn't. Nor was it a crevasse or a broken egg. It was actually a closeup of the wrecked fender of a pick up truck. The photo was taken by our own Richard McKee in the Audio-Visual Education Dept. He won Honorable Mention at the 37th Annual Salon of the Biographical Photographic Association, Toronto, Canada, 1967, with this one. , fit;./! Smp0Ort / 'PiANMiD ^R£MTM00DI r.' . / 7 / • ! i I I i j 111 t ^ '* M J I 1 I * \ , \ ‘ \ \' \ March 28 April 4 April 11 April 18 April 25 May 2 May 9 May 16 May 23 Spring 1968 Dr. Sidney Ochs, Div. of Biophysics, Indiana University School of Medicine. Dr. John Parks, Dean, George Washington School of Medicine. Mrs. Ethel Nash, Assoc. Professor, Obstetrics § Gynecology, University of South Carolina. Dr. Yeheziel Stein, Hadassah Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel. Dr. Victor Fuchs, Assoc. Director of Research, National Bureau of Economic Research, New York. Dr. Michael C. Latham, Department of Nutri tion, Harvard Univ. School of Public Health. Dr. Peter Marler, Assistant, Rockefeller Institute. Dr. Paul Kotin, Director, Division of Environ mental Disease Science Center, Research Tri angle Park. Dr. Milton Helpern, Medical Examiner, City of New York. All lectures are held in the Hospital Amphitheatre at 5:00 p.m., and are preceded by an informal coffee-tea reception in the Hospital Dining Room, at 4:30 p.m. MED STUDENT IN PHARMACEUTICAL CONTEST A Duke University medical studen.t is one of seven national semi-finalists in a display-design competition sponsored by a pharmaceutical company in cooperation with the Student American Medical Association. Julian Duttera, a senior medical student from West Point, Ga., has received $500 from E.R. Squibb and Sons for construc tion of the display he designed and to finance his trip to the 18th annual association meeting in Detroit, April 25-27, when the displays will be exhibited. At that time the $750 grand award winner will be elected from among the semi-finalists. Duttera's exhibit will focus on blastomycosis, an infection characterized by skin tumors or by lesions in the bones, lungs, liver and other internal organs. Duttera explained that blastomycosis sometimes mimics other diseases, and for that reason he is titling his exhibit, "North American Blastomycosis--A Diagnostic Dilemna," The exhibit, he Said, "will be an effort to make„ people more aware of this disease, how it manifests itself and how it is diagnosed." It will contain pict ures of diagnostic X-rays, pictures of laboratory slides and cultures of the infection-causing organisms, a micro scope for examination of slides and an outline of thera peutic agents used to combat the disease. During the past summer Duttera said he became increasingly inter ested in blastomycosis while working with Dr. Suydam Osterhout on a history of treatment of the disease at Duke' over the past 15 years. Duttera, 26, will receive his M.D. degree in June. He earned his bachelor's de gree at Duke in 1964.
InterCom (Durham, N.C.)
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March 1, 1968, edition 1
7
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